• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

Alderon Games claims that substantial numbers of Intel 13th Gen and 14th Gen chips are defective

Status
Not open for further replies.
Joined
Sep 11, 2019
Messages
270 (0.14/day)
@evernessince

Good stuff. I was going by (obviously failing) memory on the TYC and Salazar stuff.

It is all immaterial though. Whataboutism is a terrible logical fallacy. It has nothing to do with the topic of this thread. It is uncomfortable to watch others go through the Kubler-Ross stages. (yes I am aware it is not the best or only model, lighten up) :peace:
 

64K

Joined
Mar 13, 2014
Messages
6,773 (1.73/day)
Processor i7 7700k
Motherboard MSI Z270 SLI Plus
Cooling CM Hyper 212 EVO
Memory 2 x 8 GB Corsair Vengeance
Video Card(s) Temporary MSI RTX 4070 Super
Storage Samsung 850 EVO 250 GB and WD Black 4TB
Display(s) Temporary Viewsonic 4K 60 Hz
Case Corsair Obsidian 750D Airflow Edition
Audio Device(s) Onboard
Power Supply EVGA SuperNova 850 W Gold
Mouse Logitech G502
Keyboard Logitech G105
Software Windows 10
Now there is some speculation that Intel mobile CPUs may also be affected. Intel is passing this off to system manufacturers for customer help for now.

 
Joined
Jan 29, 2023
Messages
1,520 (2.26/day)
Location
France
System Name KLM
Processor 7800X3D
Motherboard B-650E-E Strix
Cooling Arctic Cooling III 280
Memory 16x2 Fury Renegade 6000-32
Video Card(s) 4070-ti PNY
Storage 500+512+8+8+2+1+1+2+256+8+512+2
Display(s) VA 32" 4K@60 - OLED 27" 2K@240
Case 4000D Airflow
Audio Device(s) Edifier 1280Ts
Power Supply Shift 1000
Mouse 502 Hero
Keyboard K68
Software EMDB
Benchmark Scores 0>1000
LOL (MDR), It's too much...

... possibility is that wars in the world need chips more actually than habitually so consumers get what is left.
 
Joined
May 8, 2016
Messages
1,911 (0.61/day)
System Name BOX
Processor Core i7 6950X @ 4,26GHz (1,28V)
Motherboard X99 SOC Champion (BIOS F23c + bifurcation mod)
Cooling Thermalright Venomous-X + 2x Delta 38mm PWM (Push-Pull)
Memory Patriot Viper Steel 4000MHz CL16 4x8GB (@3240MHz CL12.12.12.24 CR2T @ 1,48V)
Video Card(s) Titan V (~1650MHz @ 0.77V, HBM2 1GHz, Forced P2 state [OFF])
Storage WD SN850X 2TB + Samsung EVO 2TB (SATA) + Seagate Exos X20 20TB (4Kn mode)
Display(s) LG 27GP950-B
Case Fractal Design Meshify 2 XL
Audio Device(s) Motu M4 (audio interface) + ATH-A900Z + Behringer C-1
Power Supply Seasonic X-760 (760W)
Mouse Logitech RX-250
Keyboard HP KB-9970
Software Windows 10 Pro x64
So, basically Intel did S.N.D.S. thing again (Sudden Northwood Death Syndrome), BUT because CPUs auto-overclock themselves now - everyone will experience it.
(s) Good job Intel, maybe next time don't try to push 130nm CPU's stock voltage into 10nm/"Intel 7" parts. (/s)
 
Joined
Dec 25, 2020
Messages
6,810 (4.74/day)
Location
São Paulo, Brazil
System Name "Icy Resurrection"
Processor 13th Gen Intel Core i9-13900KS Special Edition
Motherboard ASUS ROG MAXIMUS Z790 APEX ENCORE
Cooling Noctua NH-D15S upgraded with 2x NF-F12 iPPC-3000 fans and Honeywell PTM7950 TIM
Memory 32 GB G.SKILL Trident Z5 RGB F5-6800J3445G16GX2-TZ5RK @ 7600 MT/s 36-44-44-52-96 1.4V
Video Card(s) ASUS ROG Strix GeForce RTX™ 4080 16GB GDDR6X White OC Edition
Storage 500 GB WD Black SN750 SE NVMe SSD + 4 TB WD Red Plus WD40EFPX HDD
Display(s) 55-inch LG G3 OLED
Case Pichau Mancer CV500 White Edition
Power Supply EVGA 1300 G2 1.3kW 80+ Gold
Mouse Microsoft Classic Intellimouse
Keyboard Generic PS/2
Software Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC 24H2
Benchmark Scores I pulled a Qiqi~
It keeps expanding, now Alderon is saying...


At this point I wonder if something in Alderon's code specifically triggers an unknown errata? They seem to have it particularly bad with their application.

So, basically Intel did S.N.D.S. thing again (Sudden Northwood Death Syndrome), BUT because CPUs auto-overclock themselves now - everyone will experience it.
(s) Good job Intel, maybe next time don't try to push 130nm CPU's stock voltage into 10nm/"Intel 7" parts. (/s)

That would truly suck. Hopefully a new stepping will be issued. I'm also looking forward to Bartlett Lake-S, perhaps Intel should expedite its release instead of leaving it to Q3`25. Make sure to have a Core 9 Special Edition (non-Ultra) with spicy clocks for us KS folks. I'd buy that.
 
Joined
Jun 14, 2020
Messages
3,474 (2.13/day)
System Name Mean machine
Processor 12900k
Motherboard MSI Unify X
Cooling Noctua U12A
Memory 7600c34
Video Card(s) 4090 Gamerock oc
Storage 980 pro 2tb
Display(s) Samsung crg90
Case Fractal Torent
Audio Device(s) Hifiman Arya / a30 - d30 pro stack
Power Supply Be quiet dark power pro 1200
Mouse Viper ultimate
Keyboard Blackwidow 65%
It must be analogous since I keep seeing people comparing this to Ryzen 7000 cpu's burning up because Asus set voltages too high. So far we do know what the issue with Intel cpu's are as the evidence seems to be reputable with plenty of game companies citing cpu failures or games crashing, and a major SI claiming they have cpu's failing.

My point was AMD fixed the issue quickly, while Intel has remained quiet on the issue, even if this problem of degradation affects millions of cpu's they should at least admit what it is and promise their consumers that it will be fixed, because they are losing a lot of trust over this.

It isn't double standards because AMD wasn't at fault for cpu's burning up.
Wait, if the Ryzen 7000 failures burning up was an Asus problem because they set voltages too high (it wasn't just asus btw), isn't it the same with Intel? Mobos giving too much voltage?

Bringing up factual issues isn't "mindless intel bashing" as reputable tech reviewers such as GN and HUB have both discussed high power consumption at out of the box settings, which is what most people are going to use with their cpu's.
And no, I don't want a low clocked OEM variant, it's ironic you claim there are no issues with power consumption then you bring up the T version of the 14900.
I want something with performance and efficiency, which is what AMD delivers with the 5000 and 7000 series cpu's. I don't care about tinkering with the settings to get a 200W+ cpu to use less power, I just want stability out of the box because overclocking is effectively dead when you get 1-2% performance over what the cpu will boost to by default.
I agree, I don't care about tinkering with settings to get a 200w+ cpu (like the 7950x) to use less power, that's why I buy non k and T intel chips. :D
 

64K

Joined
Mar 13, 2014
Messages
6,773 (1.73/day)
Processor i7 7700k
Motherboard MSI Z270 SLI Plus
Cooling CM Hyper 212 EVO
Memory 2 x 8 GB Corsair Vengeance
Video Card(s) Temporary MSI RTX 4070 Super
Storage Samsung 850 EVO 250 GB and WD Black 4TB
Display(s) Temporary Viewsonic 4K 60 Hz
Case Corsair Obsidian 750D Airflow Edition
Audio Device(s) Onboard
Power Supply EVGA SuperNova 850 W Gold
Mouse Logitech G502
Keyboard Logitech G105
Software Windows 10
At this point I wonder if something in Alderon's code specifically triggers an unknown errata? They seem to have it particularly bad with their application.

I know nothing about programming but the game uses Unreal Engine 4 which has been used in hundreds and hundreds of games. Possibly they are doing something to bork the engine?
 
Joined
Dec 29, 2010
Messages
3,809 (0.75/day)
Processor AMD 5900x
Motherboard Asus x570 Strix-E
Cooling Hardware Labs
Memory G.Skill 4000c17 2x16gb
Video Card(s) RTX 3090
Storage Sabrent
Display(s) Samsung G9
Case Phanteks 719
Audio Device(s) Fiio K5 Pro
Power Supply EVGA 1000 P2
Mouse Logitech G600
Keyboard Corsair K95
lol ok, it's the code duh!
 
Joined
Dec 25, 2020
Messages
6,810 (4.74/day)
Location
São Paulo, Brazil
System Name "Icy Resurrection"
Processor 13th Gen Intel Core i9-13900KS Special Edition
Motherboard ASUS ROG MAXIMUS Z790 APEX ENCORE
Cooling Noctua NH-D15S upgraded with 2x NF-F12 iPPC-3000 fans and Honeywell PTM7950 TIM
Memory 32 GB G.SKILL Trident Z5 RGB F5-6800J3445G16GX2-TZ5RK @ 7600 MT/s 36-44-44-52-96 1.4V
Video Card(s) ASUS ROG Strix GeForce RTX™ 4080 16GB GDDR6X White OC Edition
Storage 500 GB WD Black SN750 SE NVMe SSD + 4 TB WD Red Plus WD40EFPX HDD
Display(s) 55-inch LG G3 OLED
Case Pichau Mancer CV500 White Edition
Power Supply EVGA 1300 G2 1.3kW 80+ Gold
Mouse Microsoft Classic Intellimouse
Keyboard Generic PS/2
Software Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC 24H2
Benchmark Scores I pulled a Qiqi~
lol ok, it's the code duh!

I'm not saying that it's the code, quite contrary. However, a processor's sole function is to execute instructions. If code causes the processor to misbehave, than that is an errata. Just a few high-profile examples, such as the translation look-aside buffer bug in the original AMD Phenom or the FDIV and F00F bugs in the original Pentium:


Every single microprocessor design contains erratum, some of which are harder to trigger than others, some of which are of much higher severity than others. Issues that cause the processor to halt and catch fire (this is a technical term for an issued instruction that causes the processor to stop operating normally) are some of the highest-severity erratum. These can be fixed either by microcode updates, often at the cost of performance (such as the Phenom TLB bug and perhaps in the same vein, Spectre and Meltdown mitigations) or operating system-level workarounds, however, some of the most deeply rooted problems can only be fixed by issuance of a new hardware revision (stepping) as they are the result of hardware design defects.

I know nothing about programming but the game uses Unreal Engine 4 which has been used in hundreds and hundreds of games. Possibly they are doing something to bork the engine?

Indeed. These engines generally provide the "meat and bones", but a lot of effects and functionality can be custom and specific to a title. Think of those as the "seasoning"
 
Joined
Dec 29, 2010
Messages
3,809 (0.75/day)
Processor AMD 5900x
Motherboard Asus x570 Strix-E
Cooling Hardware Labs
Memory G.Skill 4000c17 2x16gb
Video Card(s) RTX 3090
Storage Sabrent
Display(s) Samsung G9
Case Phanteks 719
Audio Device(s) Fiio K5 Pro
Power Supply EVGA 1000 P2
Mouse Logitech G600
Keyboard Corsair K95
I'm not saying that it's the code, quite contrary. However, a processor's sole function is to execute instructions. If code causes the processor to misbehave, than that is an errata. Just a few high-profile examples, such as the translation look-aside buffer bug in the original AMD Phenom or the FDIV and F00F bugs in the original Pentium:


Every single microprocessor design contains erratum, some of which are harder to trigger than others, some of which are of much higher severity than others. Issues that cause the processor to halt and catch fire (this is a technical term for an issued instruction that causes the processor to stop operating normally) are some of the highest-severity erratum. These can be fixed either by microcode updates, often at the cost of performance (such as the Phenom TLB bug and perhaps in the same vein, Spectre and Meltdown mitigations) or operating system-level workarounds, however, some of the most deeply rooted problems can only be fixed by issuance of a new hardware revision (stepping) as they are the result of hardware design defects.



Indeed. These engines generally provide the "meat and bones", but a lot of effects and functionality can be custom and specific to a title. Think of those as the "seasoning"
There's no good in guessing and it only leads to troll fights and we've already been thru this earlier in the thread. First it was they are just cashing in on attention at Intel's cost, to bad code, to AMD sucks too etc etc. What is key is Intel isn't do shit about it and this problem is much larger than anyone here wants to admit.
 
Joined
Feb 22, 2016
Messages
1,983 (0.62/day)
Processor Intel i5 8400
Motherboard Asus Prime H370M-Plus/CSM
Cooling Scythe Big Shuriken & Noctua NF-A15 HS-PWM chromax.black.swap
Memory 8GB Crucial Ballistix Sport LT DDR4-2400
Video Card(s) ROG-STRIX-GTX1060-O6G-GAMING
Storage 1TB 980 Pro
Display(s) Samsung UN55KU6300F
Case Cooler Master MasterCase Pro 3
Power Supply Super Flower Leadex III 750w
Software W11 Pro
They are pretty cheap at Microcenter and other places.

K, yes. KS you might find a suspect NIB at retail but are predominantly relying on used market.
 
Joined
Sep 10, 2018
Messages
6,926 (3.04/day)
Location
California
System Name His & Hers
Processor R7 5800X/ R7 7950X3D Stock
Motherboard X670E Aorus Pro X/ROG Crosshair VIII Hero
Cooling Corsair h150 elite/ Corsair h115i Platinum
Memory Trident Z5 Neo 6000/ 32 GB 3200 CL14 @3800 CL16 Team T Force Nighthawk
Video Card(s) Evga FTW 3 Ultra 3080ti/ Gigabyte Gaming OC 4090
Storage lots of SSD.
Display(s) A whole bunch OLED, VA, IPS.....
Case 011 Dynamic XL/ Phanteks Evolv X
Audio Device(s) Arctis Pro + gaming Dac/ Corsair sp 2500/ Logitech G560/Samsung Q990B
Power Supply Seasonic Ultra Prime Titanium 1000w/850w
Mouse Logitech G502 Lightspeed/ Logitech G Pro Hero.
Keyboard Logitech - G915 LIGHTSPEED / Logitech G Pro
I'm not saying that it's the code, quite contrary. However, a processor's sole function is to execute instructions. If code causes the processor to misbehave, than that is an errata. Just a few high-profile examples, such as the translation look-aside buffer bug in the original AMD Phenom or the FDIV and F00F bugs in the original Pentium:


Every single microprocessor design contains erratum, some of which are harder to trigger than others, some of which are of much higher severity than others. Issues that cause the processor to halt and catch fire (this is a technical term for an issued instruction that causes the processor to stop operating normally) are some of the highest-severity erratum. These can be fixed either by microcode updates, often at the cost of performance (such as the Phenom TLB bug and perhaps in the same vein, Spectre and Meltdown mitigations) or operating system-level workarounds, however, some of the most deeply rooted problems can only be fixed by issuance of a new hardware revision (stepping) as they are the result of hardware design defects.



Indeed. These engines generally provide the "meat and bones", but a lot of effects and functionality can be custom and specific to a title. Think of those as the "seasoning"


Bottom line though intel needs to man up and even if they don't know what is going on say we are investigating these reports and to those who are having issues we will take care of you. Not just pointing fingers and gimping their own CPUs with bios updates.
 

Count von Schwalbe

Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Nov 15, 2021
Messages
3,093 (2.78/day)
Location
Knoxville, TN, USA
System Name Work Computer | Unfinished Computer
Processor Core i7-6700 | Ryzen 5 5600X
Motherboard Dell Q170 | Gigabyte Aorus Elite Wi-Fi
Cooling A fan? | Truly Custom Loop
Memory 4x4GB Crucial 2133 C17 | 4x8GB Corsair Vengeance RGB 3600 C26
Video Card(s) Dell Radeon R7 450 | RTX 2080 Ti FE
Storage Crucial BX500 2TB | TBD
Display(s) 3x LG QHD 32" GSM5B96 | TBD
Case Dell | Heavily Modified Phanteks P400
Power Supply Dell TFX Non-standard | EVGA BQ 650W
Mouse Monster No-Name $7 Gaming Mouse| TBD
@Dr. Dro
I doubt it is errata. That would cause a lot of inexplicable crashes but not hardware failures, unless maybe corrupting some microcode.

I suspect something Alderon is doing loads a specific bus* heavier than anything Intel factory tested, and using it in a server means it has no downtime. This would dramatically accelerate degradation in the event of a manufacturing issue OR overload of voltage, whether it was the motherboard's fault or the processor's.

* Or, really, any part of the processor, but I suspect the issue does not lie inside of the cores themselves.
 
Joined
Dec 25, 2020
Messages
6,810 (4.74/day)
Location
São Paulo, Brazil
System Name "Icy Resurrection"
Processor 13th Gen Intel Core i9-13900KS Special Edition
Motherboard ASUS ROG MAXIMUS Z790 APEX ENCORE
Cooling Noctua NH-D15S upgraded with 2x NF-F12 iPPC-3000 fans and Honeywell PTM7950 TIM
Memory 32 GB G.SKILL Trident Z5 RGB F5-6800J3445G16GX2-TZ5RK @ 7600 MT/s 36-44-44-52-96 1.4V
Video Card(s) ASUS ROG Strix GeForce RTX™ 4080 16GB GDDR6X White OC Edition
Storage 500 GB WD Black SN750 SE NVMe SSD + 4 TB WD Red Plus WD40EFPX HDD
Display(s) 55-inch LG G3 OLED
Case Pichau Mancer CV500 White Edition
Power Supply EVGA 1300 G2 1.3kW 80+ Gold
Mouse Microsoft Classic Intellimouse
Keyboard Generic PS/2
Software Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC 24H2
Benchmark Scores I pulled a Qiqi~
@Dr. Dro
I doubt it is errata. That would cause a lot of inexplicable crashes but not hardware failures, unless maybe corrupting some microcode.

I suspect something Alderon is doing loads a specific bus* heavier than anything Intel factory tested, and using it in a server means it has no downtime. This would dramatically accelerate degradation in the event of a manufacturing issue OR overload of voltage, whether it was the motherboard's fault or the processor's.

* Or, really, any part of the processor, but I suspect the issue does not lie inside of the cores themselves.

All we can do is speculate, at least I brought an argument in good faith to what is effectively a troll thread. I think it was locked at some point, but it got unlocked later.
 
Joined
Dec 29, 2010
Messages
3,809 (0.75/day)
Processor AMD 5900x
Motherboard Asus x570 Strix-E
Cooling Hardware Labs
Memory G.Skill 4000c17 2x16gb
Video Card(s) RTX 3090
Storage Sabrent
Display(s) Samsung G9
Case Phanteks 719
Audio Device(s) Fiio K5 Pro
Power Supply EVGA 1000 P2
Mouse Logitech G600
Keyboard Corsair K95
@Dr. Dro
I doubt it is errata. That would cause a lot of inexplicable crashes but not hardware failures, unless maybe corrupting some microcode.

I suspect something Alderon is doing loads a specific bus* heavier than anything Intel factory tested, and using it in a server means it has no downtime. This would dramatically accelerate degradation in the event of a manufacturing issue OR overload of voltage, whether it was the motherboard's fault or the processor's.

* Or, really, any part of the processor, but I suspect the issue does not lie inside of the cores themselves.
Read the thread, Alderon is not the only dev to issue these warnings.
 

Count von Schwalbe

Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Nov 15, 2021
Messages
3,093 (2.78/day)
Location
Knoxville, TN, USA
System Name Work Computer | Unfinished Computer
Processor Core i7-6700 | Ryzen 5 5600X
Motherboard Dell Q170 | Gigabyte Aorus Elite Wi-Fi
Cooling A fan? | Truly Custom Loop
Memory 4x4GB Crucial 2133 C17 | 4x8GB Corsair Vengeance RGB 3600 C26
Video Card(s) Dell Radeon R7 450 | RTX 2080 Ti FE
Storage Crucial BX500 2TB | TBD
Display(s) 3x LG QHD 32" GSM5B96 | TBD
Case Dell | Heavily Modified Phanteks P400
Power Supply Dell TFX Non-standard | EVGA BQ 650W
Mouse Monster No-Name $7 Gaming Mouse| TBD
All we can do is speculate, at least I brought an argument in good faith to what is effectively a troll thread. I think it was locked at some point, but it got unlocked later.
Indeed, and I appreciate it. I was simply bringing up a counterpoint, as I see it.
Read the thread, Alderon is not the only dev to issue these warnings.
Yes, I see that. I have been following this thread with interest (other than the fanboyfight in the middle) and it seems to me that Alderon is claiming a 100% failure rate. This seems far in excess of the other developers, but AFAIK Alderon was the only studio using them as a server.

This is why I speculated that Alderon's code, specifically their server-side code, was putting an unusual load on a weak link in the CPU. A weak link that most factory stress tests would not load, or QA would have seen this.

It is possible that QA saw it coming and the beancounters said to ship it anyways, but that can only remain speculation on our part. Personally I kind of doubt it.
 
Joined
Dec 29, 2010
Messages
3,809 (0.75/day)
Processor AMD 5900x
Motherboard Asus x570 Strix-E
Cooling Hardware Labs
Memory G.Skill 4000c17 2x16gb
Video Card(s) RTX 3090
Storage Sabrent
Display(s) Samsung G9
Case Phanteks 719
Audio Device(s) Fiio K5 Pro
Power Supply EVGA 1000 P2
Mouse Logitech G600
Keyboard Corsair K95
Indeed, and I appreciate it. I was simply bringing up a counterpoint, as I see it.

Yes, I see that. I have been following this thread with interest (other than the fanboyfight in the middle) and it seems to me that Alderon is claiming a 100% failure rate. This seems far in excess of the other developers, but AFAIK Alderon was the only studio using them as a server.

This is why I speculated that Alderon's code, specifically their server-side code, was putting an unusual load on a weak link in the CPU. A weak link that most factory stress tests would not load, or QA would have seen this.

It is possible that QA saw it coming and the beancounters said to ship it anyways, but that can only remain speculation on our part. Personally I kind of doubt it.
Alderon is the only one that's stated any stats on this and I'm sure they're pretty pissed off given how they went all in on Intel only to get screwed with no recourse. Note the hundreds of K they have lost already. Again this is larger than just Alderon and regardless Intel is the party that needs to step in and reassure everyone, yet they haven't. Circling around Alderon is just victim blaming.
 
Joined
Jan 29, 2023
Messages
1,520 (2.26/day)
Location
France
System Name KLM
Processor 7800X3D
Motherboard B-650E-E Strix
Cooling Arctic Cooling III 280
Memory 16x2 Fury Renegade 6000-32
Video Card(s) 4070-ti PNY
Storage 500+512+8+8+2+1+1+2+256+8+512+2
Display(s) VA 32" 4K@60 - OLED 27" 2K@240
Case 4000D Airflow
Audio Device(s) Edifier 1280Ts
Power Supply Shift 1000
Mouse 502 Hero
Keyboard K68
Software EMDB
Benchmark Scores 0>1000
Joined
Sep 10, 2018
Messages
6,926 (3.04/day)
Location
California
System Name His & Hers
Processor R7 5800X/ R7 7950X3D Stock
Motherboard X670E Aorus Pro X/ROG Crosshair VIII Hero
Cooling Corsair h150 elite/ Corsair h115i Platinum
Memory Trident Z5 Neo 6000/ 32 GB 3200 CL14 @3800 CL16 Team T Force Nighthawk
Video Card(s) Evga FTW 3 Ultra 3080ti/ Gigabyte Gaming OC 4090
Storage lots of SSD.
Display(s) A whole bunch OLED, VA, IPS.....
Case 011 Dynamic XL/ Phanteks Evolv X
Audio Device(s) Arctis Pro + gaming Dac/ Corsair sp 2500/ Logitech G560/Samsung Q990B
Power Supply Seasonic Ultra Prime Titanium 1000w/850w
Mouse Logitech G502 Lightspeed/ Logitech G Pro Hero.
Keyboard Logitech - G915 LIGHTSPEED / Logitech G Pro
All we can do is speculate, at least I brought an argument in good faith to what is effectively a troll thread. I think it was locked at some point, but it got unlocked later.

Yeah, I have multiple buddies with 13/14th gen i7/i9s and none of them have failed and only 2 were mildly unstable at stock but on one a bios update fixed it the other one was replaced by Amazon and the replacement is working just fine.

That being said these are primarily used for gaming which isn't a very taxing load in 99% of games so just having the specter of this lingering isn't a good feeling for owners of these processors some reassurance from intel that they are taking this seriously would go a long way.

My guess is their lawyers are advising them to be quiet but we honestly shouldn't have to guess or even speculate about this.


Personally I won't be buying either companies product for at least 6-12 months post release. The days of me buying cpus at launch are probably dead. I'd rather give the cpu/platform time to mature and see if there are any issues with said platform going forward.
 
Last edited:
Joined
Mar 13, 2021
Messages
472 (0.35/day)
Processor AMD 7600x
Motherboard Asrock x670e Steel Legend
Cooling Silver Arrow Extreme IBe Rev B with 2x 120 Gentle Typhoons
Memory 4x16Gb Patriot Viper Non RGB @ 6000 30-36-36-36-40
Video Card(s) XFX 6950XT MERC 319
Storage 2x Crucial P5 Plus 1Tb NVME
Display(s) 3x Dell Ultrasharp U2414h
Case Coolermaster Stacker 832
Power Supply Thermaltake Toughpower PF3 850 watt
Mouse Logitech G502 (OG)
Keyboard Logitech G512
Wait, if the Ryzen 7000 failures burning up was an Asus problem because they set voltages too high (it wasn't just asus btw), isn't it the same with Intel? Mobos giving too much voltage?
This is where the difference lies. AMDs was dying because it was being fed voltage it wasnt designed/rated for and actually when you were setting 1.3v in SoC there was quite a few boards going "LOL No" and putting up to 1.6v through it instead.

If what GN is saying is true then the copper vias/layers havent been made to the correct specification so those paths degrade/go out of specification and with the amount of reports/noise from the datacenter level areas that are using these in boards designed for stability/NOT turboing to 11ty billion Mhz and still experiencing issues on the scale of Intel just giving them trays of replacements going "this may fix it".

Level1tech also mentioned in their video that the datacenters providing these have got a MASSIVE premium on the support contracts due to the amount of hands on support being requested/required due to issues isnt a good thing.


This is smelling very similar to the 1.13Ghz P3 debacle of yesteryear.............problem is that this isnt 4 weeks of release........this is 12+ months of retail and OEM parts that are problematic.
 
Joined
Oct 30, 2020
Messages
253 (0.17/day)
It's funny seeing posts like it's not a real problem because it's not on the news right now. It's probably because it's past the point where it's news anymore. It's been 6 months since the initial reports, so it can't come on the news every week for that long can it. That's a lot of news. To someone saying their reputable media outlet not having this on news means it's not real - is Intel one of your reputable media outlets? This just erupted again now because Wendell decided to do a mega ton of work and post findings from his investigation. It's also disappointing that some haven't watched the video and try to speculate things. I mean, read a short commentary on it if you don't watch it. It's not isolated to Alderon or their code - multiple game devs, server farms and small SI's are all mentioned. Big system integrators are also starting to speak up. We are talking about double digits of 13/14900K's degrading in less than a year under load. Is it certain batches, is it just the stock settings being unstable, it is a fabrication defect or something else, we don't fully know yet.

Alderon's 100% claim is under their assumption which is that at stock settings, 13/14900K's will degrade under load in a much shorter than acceptable lifespan. Their claim might be incorrect, or fixed if intel can through software. But there are many implications if that fix comes with a performance penalty.

It's been too long now, at least release a statement saying your earlier statement was incorrect and the issue isn't isolated only to motherboard manufacturers pushing too high power limits and that they'll look into it and hand out no questions asked RMA's or something...

Also, AMD's issues shouldn't even brought into this discussion. That whole episode lasted less than a TV episode, but this one going well past the point of acceptable limits for a movie and should really stop..
 

Count von Schwalbe

Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Nov 15, 2021
Messages
3,093 (2.78/day)
Location
Knoxville, TN, USA
System Name Work Computer | Unfinished Computer
Processor Core i7-6700 | Ryzen 5 5600X
Motherboard Dell Q170 | Gigabyte Aorus Elite Wi-Fi
Cooling A fan? | Truly Custom Loop
Memory 4x4GB Crucial 2133 C17 | 4x8GB Corsair Vengeance RGB 3600 C26
Video Card(s) Dell Radeon R7 450 | RTX 2080 Ti FE
Storage Crucial BX500 2TB | TBD
Display(s) 3x LG QHD 32" GSM5B96 | TBD
Case Dell | Heavily Modified Phanteks P400
Power Supply Dell TFX Non-standard | EVGA BQ 650W
Mouse Monster No-Name $7 Gaming Mouse| TBD
Alderon is the only one that's stated any stats on this and I'm sure they're pretty pissed off given how they went all in on Intel only to get screwed with no recourse. Note the hundreds of K they have lost already. Again this is larger than just Alderon and regardless Intel is the party that needs to step in and reassure everyone, yet they haven't. Circling around Alderon is just victim blaming.
I certainly was not trying to blame Alderon. If the code runs on the CPU, the CPU should be able to handle it.

What is the Mean Time Until Failure of an 11900K? A 5950X? A 3770K? An A14 Bionic? Not less than a year, even as a server chip.

What part of the chip itself is degrading? The substrate? The cores? The cache? If we knew this, we could speculated further. I mentioned Alderon's code before; I was speculating that their server-side code was accelerating the issue. I sincerely doubt that they are the only ones experiencing the same rapid degradation - I am sure many others using these as servers are as well.

I was mostly using that as a comparison to a home user. There are 8760 or so hours in a year - are all 14900K's going to die before being used for 8700 hours? Probably not. There are a wide array of loads a home computer runs. It is unlikely that they will all stress whatever part is failing on these. But who knows? If it is the power delivery circuitry, then every second it is run at max load could be shortening its lifespan.
 
Joined
Mar 21, 2016
Messages
2,508 (0.79/day)
I dropped the ring down to x32 and P cores set at 4.9GHz and E cores at x38 with system memory running 4000MT/s CL30 and just had a BSOD while running 7-zip benchmark. :shadedshu: I'll try SPD just to rule that out, but it's blue screening under those settings these chips seem to be broken as hell. That's on a 240 push/pull AIO as well in a very well ventilated case. That's far below what these chips are marketed to run at.
 
Joined
Nov 16, 2023
Messages
1,382 (3.62/day)
Location
Nowhere
System Name I don't name my rig
Processor 14700K
Motherboard Asus TUF Z790
Cooling Air/water/DryIce
Memory DDR5 G.Skill Z5 RGB 6000mhz C36
Video Card(s) RTX 4070 Super
Storage 980 Pro
Display(s) Some LED 1080P TV
Case Open bench
Audio Device(s) Some Old Sherwood stereo and old cabinet speakers
Power Supply Corsair 1050w HX series
Mouse Razor Mamba Tournament Edition
Keyboard Logitech G910
VR HMD Quest 2
Software Windows
Benchmark Scores Max Freq 13700K 6.7ghz DryIce Max Freq 14700K 7.0ghz DryIce Max all time Freq FX-8300 7685mhz LN2
Says the guy claiming Ryzen 3000 series had 5% failure rate without even providing a source at all. Talk about hypocritical.
I don't need to provide anything unless you have a humble request vs posting bullshit of your own.

Here's a site "claiming" up to 16% failure rates on AMD processors.


But so far in this forum, using simple statistics like registered users vs amount of threads with Intel Raptor lake chips being RMA'd, like actually sent out... is bad odds on your part.
 
Joined
Sep 11, 2019
Messages
270 (0.14/day)
This isn't about one game dev. Going to need a much bigger magazine if you are going to rely on the shoot the messenger fallacy. Because the number of messengers is constantly growing. Better have a load for kaiju too, because Nvidia was the messenger back in April - https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-com...-gen-cpu-instability-to-contact-intel-support

Survivorship bias is powerful stuff. But this is well beyond the stage where it carries much weight. For those of us that have been following this since early this year, all that is left now is - Intel concluding the investigation, explaining the problem/s and providing solutions. Including a customer care program to service affected users.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top